The Super Eagles now have their next checkpoint. The Nigeria Football Federation has confirmed that Eric Chelle’s side will face Poland on June 3 at the PGE Narodowy Stadium in Warsaw and Portugal on June 10 in Portugal, with the exact venue for the second game still to be announced. The fixtures come after Nigeria’s March window against Iran and Jordan and give the team another high-level test before competitive football returns.

This is more than a fixture announcement
Poland didn’t make it to the World Cup like Nigeria but Portugal are World Cup-bound, which immediately raises the value of the window. These are not routine friendlies. They are measuring-stick games for a Nigeria side still trying to sharpen identity, consistency, and decision-making under Chelle.
Why the timing works for Nigeria
The scheduling creates a useful sequence. Nigeria will first defend its Unity Cup title in London from May 26 to 30, then move into the June friendlies. That means the Super Eagles will enter the Poland and Portugal matches with live game rhythm rather than a cold restart, which should help the coaching staff test structure, tempo, and selection choices under more realistic pressure.

Two different tests in one window
Poland and Portugal should ask different questions. Poland is a good control test: physical, structured, and likely to force Nigeria into discipline without the ball. Portugal is the sharper stress test. The NFF notes that Portugal will use the game as their final match before the World Cup, which means Nigeria are likely to meet a side treating the evening with real seriousness. That is what gives the second fixture extra edge.
What Chelle should be looking for
The major subject here is whether Chelle can come out of the window with clearer answers. He needs to know if the team can control transitions better, whether the midfield shape is strong enough against top opposition, and which attacking combinations hold up when the margin for error shrinks. The June friendlies will not settle every debate, but they can narrow them.
What this means next
For now, the Super Eagles have a credible road map. Unity Cup gives them rhythm. Poland gives them a measured European test. Portugal gives them a sharper final exam in the same window. If Chelle handles the stretch well, Nigeria will leave June with more than results. They will leave with clarity.
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